Samsung UN65HU8550 4K Ultra 3D Smart LED TV Review

Not interested in the curviest, flashiest Samsung 4K on the market, but still looking for top-notch? Here you go: The Samsung UN65HU8550 ($446) is a 4K option that’s just one step down from the company’s top 2014 offering, the curved HU9000.

Since they have fewer local dimming zones and traditional flat screens, the HU8550 4K TVs (available in 50-, 55-, 65-, and 75-inch sizes ranging from $446 to $499) cost about $500 less than their curved counterparts.

The HU8550 series is also internet-ready, 3D capable, and razor-sharp—thanks to a native resolution of 3,840 x 2,160 pixels. That resolution promises four times the detail of Full HD 1080p televisions, but whether you have the content to take advantage of it is another matter entirely.

As you might expect, the HU8550 wields picture quality that’s quite good, but not as good as the HU9000 series. It won’t blow your mind like a high-end plasma or OLED TV might, but like most of Samsung’s LCD TVs it’s a very solid performer with way more positive than negative qualities.

Traditionally, edge-lit LED televisions struggle with certain aspects of overall picture quality, such as black level, motion, and light uniformity. With plasma on the decline, however, LCD TVs are front-and-center this year—they need to be better, and the UN65HU8550 is a testament to what the newest models are capable of.

Time in the lab revealed healthy black levels and bright, vibrant white levels (keystones of good picture quality). Expect impressive shadows and satisfying highlights, thanks to the TV’s Smart LED local dimming.

So-called “local dimming” controls the TV’s backlight by manipulating autonomous zones (hence the name) of LEDs; that way, if the top left corner needs to depict a very bright lamp post while the bottom left depicts a very dark street corner, the local dimming can simultaneously boost and dim the LEDs in those zones to capture the necessary contrast.

A common issue that plagues edge-lit TVs like the UN65HU8550 is poor uniformity—cloudiness or “flashlighting” that occurs when the backlight bleeds into areas of the screen that are supposed to be dark. While you can still see a bit of unwanted light while watching this TV in the dark, it’s uniformity is much better than standard edge-lit LED performance.

Additionally, LCD TVs like the HU8550 often struggle to maintain clarity during motion, especially when compared to plasma sets.

Fortunately, the HU8550 is equipped with Samsung’s Auto Motion Plus frame interpolator and Motion Lighting black frame inserter. The latter can only be used when the local dimming is off, unfortunately, as it drops the entire backlight in order to reduce the motion blur associated with “sample-and-hold,” the term for how LCD panels handle motion across changing pixels.

Auto Motion Plus functions on conjunction with the laudable local dimming feature, however, and it smoothes out blurriness and color trailing quite effectively. The one drawback to the AMP feature is that users will have to play around with the Custom setting to get the best results for different kinds of content—settings that work for sports, for example, won’t necessarily work for film. And, as always, the motion performance still isn’t comparable to a good plasma TV.

One place where the HU8550 could have performed better was in color production and transition. Producing the ideal colors (per international standards) ensures that content not only looks the way the director intended, but that details are richly preserved.

I found during testing that the HU8550’s Auto color space renders a few colors (such as green and cyan) as the wrong hue. While this isn’t a drastic problem, it does cause some banding—where colors shifting in luminance or strength across a gradation transition too suddenly and have a banded appearance. Uncompressed content, such as from a Blu-ray disc, looks fine, but more highly compressed content (such as from cable or streaming apps) shows some color banding.

If you flattened out Samsung’s premium 2014 curved TV, you’d get the HU8550. Trim bezels and a very narrow panel lend this television a modern air. Contrast is mildly enhanced by the black bezels, whereas the silver stand tends to catch ambient light in an attractive fashion.

Unlike Samsung’s premium curved TVs, the HU8550 displays don’t include One Connect boxes (which work as external mainboards for ports so that users can more easily hide tangled cables). The HU8550 TVs do have a cable connection for the One Connect box, though, so buyers can purchase one if they so desire.

Video connections are instead found in the more traditional spot on the back of the TV, and there’s still plenty of them: four HDMI inputs, three USB inputs, shared component/composite jacks, ethernet (LAN) in, RS-232c, IR blaster out, RF (coaxial) in, digital audio out, and analog audio out.

There’s tons of cool stuff in the box, too. Samsung includes four pairs of active 3D glasses, an IR blaster, and two remote controls with batteries. One of these controllers is the usual infrared kind. It’s reliable and backlit, with plenty of shortcut buttons. The other controller is the Samsung Smart Control, new for this year. This mouse-like remote is your best bet for deftly handling the TV’s corncucopic smart features (more on those in the next section). The Smart Control creates an on-screen cursor for quick selection, and has a built-in microphone for voice commands.

If there’s one trend that encompasses almost all modern, high-end TVs, it’s smart (internet) functionality. The HU8550 has it in spades: Wielding Samsung’s new Smart Hub, this TV provides all of the streaming content and web browsing functions you’d expect for the price.

This year, the Smart Hub is broken up into four pages: Movies & TV, Games, Multimedia, and Samsung Apps. There’s a fifth page, called On TV, that only appears once you’ve integrated a cable or satellite provider into the Smart Hub.

To get started, you’ll have to jump onto a wireless signal (or connect via ethernet cable) and create a Samsung account. Don’t worry, it just requires an e-mail and password—no credit card nonsense. If you’re a cable or satellite subscriber, you can plug the IR blaster in and program the TV to control your set-top-box and display what’s on right in the Smart Hub. This isn’t just a convenience feature: It’s much more visually-appealing than most cable menus, and knocks down the wall between what’s available online and what’s piping into your home from your cable or satellite provider.

Best of all, as you use the Smart Hub, the TV will slowly learn which programming/apps you prefer, and put them front-and-center. While there’s literally too much content in the Smart Hub for me to discuss it all, most of the apps you’ll want to use (like Netflix) are already pre-installed on the TV, making it easy to set it up and get to binge watching.

Samsung’s menu, where you’ll primarily adjust picture, sound, network, and system settings, is largely unchanged this year. Basic controls like Backlight, Contrast, and Color are easy enough to find, but if you want to tamper with the TV’s local dimming, for example, you’ll have to dig a little deeper. Experienced calibrators will want to navigate to the Advanced Picture menu for gamma, white balance, and color space controls.

Two important menu items that set the HU8550 apart from Samsung’s lower-end, non-4K lineup are Smart LED and Multi-Link Screen.

The former is the control for the TV’s local dimming, which is where its primary strength lies as far as picture quality goes. This control toggles between Standard, High, and Off. You’ll want to leave it on to get the most out of this television.

Multi-Link Screen lets you display multiple Full HD (1080p) images at the same time. For example, you can watch a movie in one “box” while surfing on the TV’s web browser in another. This feature isn’t completely customizable, which is my only complaint about it—you can only choose from a few different sources to split.

Last but not least, you’ll find four pairs of active 3D glasses in the box because the HU8550 is a fully-capable 3D display. Whether watching full 3D content or using the TV’s 2D-to-3D converter, expect the 4K resolution to improve the depth and feel of this feature a notable amount. We can’t fully commend the 3D of 4K TVs until native 3D content exists in that resolution, however.

The 65-inch HU8550 (MSRP $446) is a strong performer, especially when you stack it up against both Samsung’s 65-inch HU9000 and Panasonic’s 65-inch AX800U. Those 4K options may perform a little better, but they also cost About $500 more than the HU8550, and that’s a huge selling point.

The reason for this discrepancy in price? The HU8550 has fewer local dimming zones, meaning its overall picture quality is a little worse—but only a little. The TV’s dynamic performance (black and white luminance), motion, and uniformity are very comparable to the excellent HU9000 series, and both series feature identical smart features.

So unless you absolutely need the highest performance pedigree, the HU8550 is a decent 4K option. It’s true: This TV doesn’t hold up next to Panasonic’s plasmatic AX800U in a black, home theater environment. You’d be hard-pressed to notice a major difference in normal lighting conditions, though—and you’ll definitely notice an extra $500 in your wallet.